Monday Open: $1,283.10
Weekly High: $1,294.50
Weekly Low: $1,273.30
Friday Close: $1,294.90
The most dramatic shift in the price of gold happened this week on Wednesday, but no radical gains or losses were reported for the week overall.
Monday opened the week with short covering and bargain hunting to end the trading day slightly higher. Not too much global news impacted the prices early in the week, prices instead stagnating on anticipation of the Federal Reserve’s semi-annual address to the House of Representatives on Wednesday and Thursday.
Tuesday saw prices rise on increased stability of U.S. inflation pressures. Traders in the gold market banked on the expectation that the Fed wouldn’t start their bond tapering program as soon as previously expected. This theory is based on Chairman Ben Bernanke’s recent addresses, in which he has not indicated a certain time frame for ending the quantitative easing program.
Part of this is because the U.S. economy, though experiencing improvement, has not accelerated at a rate to deem higher interest rates appropriate quite yet. An unstable job market and low inflation are still the names of the game right now. Last week the gold market responded to the Fed’s slow movement with a 5% increase in prices.
True to expectations, Bernanke did not give any solid indication of when the tapering program might begin. Analysts are calling his address a wash, since no major changes are being made. The sharp drop on Wednesday can more be attributed to a high dollar and technical correction than to reactions to the Fed.
Thursday when Bernanke continued his address, the gold marketplace continued to report little to no reaction. Thursday ended a little higher from traders taking advantage of the brief price fall.
Friday was quiet overall, ending the week a few points higher than it began, pushed upward more by bullish outside markets than any major world news.
Leave a Reply